Your listing ran its full term on the MLS and didn't sell. Now you're getting calls from agents offering to relist at the same price with a "fresh approach," and the house is sitting. I'm not an agent. I buy directly with cash, no MLS, no open houses, no more waiting, and I can close on a timeline that actually works for you.
The sign came down. The listing went off the MLS. The agent stopped calling. Whatever the strategy was, it didn't sell the house, and now you're staring at a property that's officially been on the market and didn't move.
Here's what's actually happening:
When a listing agreement expires, typically after 90 to 180 days, though the length is negotiated in the contract, the agent's authority to market the property ends and the home is removed from the MLS. The contract between you and the listing agent terminates; you're no longer obligated to that agent unless a commission protection period applies to buyers introduced during the listing. What you're left with is an unsold house, a market that has already passed judgment on the asking price or condition, and the knowledge that whatever the listing agent's strategy was, it didn't work.
There are three real reasons listings expire without selling: price, condition, and buyer pool. The most common by far is price, a house priced 5% to 10% above what buyers will pay gets initial showings, no offers, and gradually disappears from buyer attention as the days-on-market count climbs. Condition is the second cause: a house with physical issues that deter retail buyers or fail at the appraisal or inspection stage gets activity but not offers that close. And buyer pool means the property needed a different kind of buyer than the MLS typically delivers, an investor, a cash buyer, someone who understands distressed property. In every case, a direct sale to a cash buyer sidesteps the mechanism that failed.
A property that sat for 90 days at a given price, then expires, then comes back immediately at the same price is not new inventory, it's the same property with new photos. Buyers track days-on-market and know that a relist immediately after expiration carries cumulative time on market. In New Jersey's MLS, a meaningful reset requires roughly 90 days off market, and even then, buyers who saw the original listing remember it. Relisting without a real change in price or condition usually doesn't change the outcome.
Sellers who get fresh paint, new fixtures, and restaged photos after a failed listing sometimes see a brief boost in showings without a change in offers, because the real issue was price or a structural condition that cosmetics don't fix. Spending $8,000 on updates when the underlying problem is a $40,000 roof or an offer price $30,000 above market is not a useful investment. Identify the real reason the listing failed before spending anything.
After months of no sale, sellers sometimes accept aggressive offers from buyers who know the property has been sitting, and the frustration of the process means they don't take the time to get a second opinion. A legitimate cash buyer who can actually close quickly may well offer more than the lowball buyer who is using the listing history as leverage. Get a competing number before deciding.
I'm not trying to relist your house. I'm buying it. My offer is based on the property's actual condition and the current local market, not the asking price from the expired listing, not what you hoped to net, and not a formula that pretends to account for everything without seeing the house. I walk the property, give you a number the same day, and close when you're ready.
In New Jersey, listing agreements are governed by the terms of the individual contract between the seller and the listing broker, they're not standardized by state law, though the New Jersey Real Estate Commission (NJREC) regulates the licensing of agents and brokers. The commission protection period, sometimes called a "safety clause", is a standard provision in most New Jersey listing agreements: it protects the listing agent's commission for a defined period (often 90 to 180 days) if you sell to a buyer who was shown the property during the listing. When a listing expires on NJMLS or Garden State MLS, relisting typically carries cumulative days-on-market unless 90 days off market have elapsed. New Jersey's market in cities like Newark, Trenton, and Paterson tends to have a significant inventory of properties that stall on the MLS because of condition issues that retail buyers can't finance, that's the gap where a direct cash sale closes.
Pennsylvania listing agreements operate under similar dynamics. The Pennsylvania Real Estate Commission oversees agent licensing, and listing agreement terms, including duration and commission protection periods, are negotiated per contract. Philadelphia's Bright MLS (which also covers parts of Maryland) and TREND MLS systems track days-on-market data that buyers and buyer's agents actively review. A house with 90+ days on market in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh is heavily discounted in buyer perception, regardless of how the listing is presented. Philadelphia's market has a specific subset of properties, rowhouses with deferred maintenance, houses with L&I histories, properties in transitional neighborhoods, that consistently underperform on the MLS because the retail buyer pool can't or won't finance them. These are the properties where a direct cash offer frequently closes where months of MLS activity couldn't.
Maryland listing agreements are governed by the Maryland Real Estate Commission and are structured similarly to New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the terms, including duration and commission protection periods, are negotiated individually. The Bright MLS serves the Baltimore/Washington corridor and tracks days-on-market across Maryland. Baltimore City's MLS market has a significant segment of properties, particularly in neighborhoods like Park Heights, Harwood, Belair-Edison, and Oliver, where retail buyer demand is limited and properties sit for extended periods or expire without selling. In suburban Maryland counties including Prince George's County, Howard County, and Anne Arundel County, properties with significant condition issues also frequently fail on the MLS because FHA and conventional buyers encounter appraisal and inspection obstacles. The expired listing in these markets often represents a property that simply needed a different kind of buyer, one who doesn't require the house to qualify for a retail mortgage. That's where I come in.
Three fields on the form. Or a text. Address is enough to start. I'll pull the basics myself.
I call you back, walk through what I saw, and give you a real cash number. Not a range. Not a "let me get back to you."
Seven days, three weeks, ninety days, your call. We sign at a title company. You leave with a wire.
Once the listing agreement expires, the agent's contract ends. However, most listing agreements include a commission protection period, often 90 to 180 days, during which the agent is still entitled to a commission if you sell to a buyer they introduced during the listing. Review your listing agreement carefully before proceeding. If you're selling to me after the protection period ends and I had no contact with you during the listing, no commission is typically owed to the prior agent.
In NJMLS and Garden State MLS, relisting after an expiration typically requires a meaningful gap, roughly 90 days off market, to reset the days-on-market counter. An immediate relist carries cumulative days, which buyers and their agents use as negotiating leverage. If your property sat for 90+ days before expiring, coming back at the same price and condition usually doesn't change the buyer response.
The three main reasons are price, condition, and buyer pool. Most often it's price, a property overpriced by even 5% gets showings but no offers, and the days-on-market count signals to buyers that something is wrong. Condition is the second cause: houses with physical issues kill financed deals at the appraisal or inspection stage. And buyer pool means the property simply needed a different kind of buyer, an investor or cash buyer who doesn't require the house to qualify for a retail mortgage.
Everything that killed the retail deal, FHA appraisers flagging a roof with less than three years of life, conventional buyers walking after an inspection, lenders declining because the HVAC is inoperable, is irrelevant to my purchase. I close with my own cash. The offer reflects the property's actual condition. No financing contingency, no inspection re-trade.
With a clean title, seven to fourteen days. The main variable is the title search, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Maryland title companies typically take five to ten business days to run a full search and commit. If the property has old liens, unpaid water bills, or estate gaps that need resolution, add time for those. I'll tell you on day one what I expect the timeline to look like, so there are no surprises.
Three things. Name, phone, address. That's the start.